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tommy271

Forumer storico
Probe into German-Greek arms deals reveals murky side of defense sales






Despite being heavily in debt, Greece keeps spending on arms. A probe into its accounts has led to an investigation into submarine deals with Germany and alleged corruption in the grey areas of the EU's defense sector.


After months of haggling over its involvement in the unprecedented European Union bailout to save Greece from defaulting, Germany finds itself at the center of another financial tangle with the debt-ridden Mediterranean nation - this time involving defense contracts Greece could ill afford and the shadowy deals behind them.
At the same time that German Chancellor Angela Merkel's cabinet was approving 22.4 billion euros ($29.7 billion) in aid to Greece, prosecutors in Germany began investigating whether defense contractors had paid millions of euros in bribes to Greek officials in connection with the sale of two German submarines in a deal worth more than a billion euros.
The investigation, which began in May, is focussing on the deal - part of a larger, complicated decade-old contract to provide Greece with a total of six submarines - struck between Berlin and Athens in March as Greece lurched toward bankruptcy. The investigation is also looking at similar defense deals struck between Germany and Portugal, another EU member state teetering on the brink of financial collapse.


German firm at the heart of bribery allegations


The probe is looking into allegations that Ferrostaal AG, one of the German companies helping to build the submarines, was involved in bribery. Ferrostaal executives are suspected by Munich prosecutors of authorizing payments worth millions of euros to politicians to win the initial deal in 2000 through a Greek company called Marine Industrial Enterprises.
According to records unearthed by the German investigation, Ferrostaal allegedly used false consulting contracts to cover up the bribes before distributing payments to "officials and decision-makers" in Greece. The prosecutors also allege that Ferrostaal accepted fees from other companies for bribes paid on their behalf, in effect operating a policy of subcontracted bribery.
While no charges have been brought in the on-going investigation into the submarine deal, several Ferrostaal executives stepped down in May and three company representatives have been indicted, along with individuals in Portugal linked to the Portuguese deals. The company itself could face fines in excess of 120 million euros if found guilty of bribing officials in Greece and Portugal.
Greece's economic crimes unit is also probing the transaction as part of its investigation into all weapons deals made by Athens over the past decade, deals said to be in the region of 16 billion euros in total, to determine whether Greece overpaid or agreed to deals for military equipment it didn't need.
Greece is the largest importer of conventional weapons in Europe and its military spending, the highest in the European Union, is widely accepted as one of the main reasons for the parlous state of its finances.


EU urged to clamp down on defence sector corruption


The revelations and investigations in the deals between Germany, Greece and Portugal have also prompted members of the European Parliament to call for the EU to launch its own probe, with some officials accusing Germany of making their military dealings with Greece a condition for its involvement in the country's bailout and profiting from Athens' profligacy.
German government officials have vehemently denied that Germany took advantage of Greece's spending habits to land lucrative defense deals and have dismissed claims that its involvement in the rescue package, in which Germany was the largest EU contributor of financial aid, was dependent on agreements being signed.
"This is a very difficult matter," Dr. Christian Moelling, a European defense expert from the German Institute for International and Security Affairs, told Deutsche Welle. "If Greece wants to spend the money, then of course it can but at the moment it is spending EU money...or, in fact, mostly Germany's money."
"The problem is that this submarine deal is an old deal. It was signed in 2000 before Greece had this level of financial problems. As with any deal, it is very hard to get out of the contract and the private actors in this deal have every right to get their money."
As well as the submarine deals themselves, it is thought that "offset contracts" were also signed to the tune of one billion euros. Offsets are arrangements made by purchasing governments with their suppliers, requiring the contractors to reinvest a percentage of the value of the deal in the importing country.


Offset deals under scrutiny in addition to illegal payments

"The arms trade is already an incubator of corruption with such large sums of money flowing around, and all that secrecy," Nick Whitney, a European defence expert at the European Council for Foreign Relations, told Deutsche Welle. "It's so easy to avoid clear accountability about what you've bought, and why. The best antidotes are transparency, and competition. But if you add offsets to the deal, it only gets murkier."

"The temptation to look for offsets - compensation for a big export of state capital - is understandable for some countries especially if you don't have an armaments industry of your own, and so can't expect to get compensated on a 'swings and roundabouts' basis."

Dr. Moelling describes offsets as side deals. "Direct offsets are deals which happen thus: the purchaser will say, for example, 'we want to buy your fighter aircraft but we also want you to provide us with the industrial capability to build the missiles which goes with it.' The seller will perhaps build the factory, pass on the technical knowledge or include the license to build the missiles in the deal for the plane."
"Indirect offsets work in much the same way but the additional deal will include something not attached to original product; we buy the plane, you build a hospital," he added. "These offsets often go beyond just the supplying company and can include participation by the supplier's government. In the case of the submarines, this would be the German government."


Grey area of EU defense sector open to abuse

Under many trade agreements and in most industries, offsets are illegal but the EU allows them in defense procurement where member states can invoke a "national security" exemption. Opponents of offset agreements say they are negotiated among companies with government favoritism and violate the EU's internal market competition rules.


"In the civilian field, offsets are illegal but in the defense sector, they are legal," Dr. Moelling added. "In the EU, article 346 of the current treaty says that any agreement can be overruled if it is claimed to be in the national security. The problem is that there are many different opinions on offsets in the EU. Germany says they are not helpful as they blur the actual price of products. Greece meanwhile has a very active offset policy while other countries have no official policy. Offests aren't part of any typical market so they're very hard to monitor and are highly politicized."
"The European defense agency recently brokered an agreement amongst European member states to limit offset to 100 percent of the value of the arms contract," Nick Witney said.

"Previously, many member states were looking for a lot more. Austria was the most striking case - they used to demand 300 percent offset. In such circumstances, weapon-buying becomes the least important part of the transaction - the big money is in the offset. So any pretence that you are buying the best weapon at the best price for your military needs goes out of the window - noone can really disentangle why you've bought what you've bought."

The EU has been called upon to tackle the "national security" exemption invoked by member states when dealing in offsets. The EU is planning to introduce a new "defense procurement directive" which will restrict the areas in which governments can use the exemption and demand that the offsets they are involved in are necessary for the protection of security interests and do not break competition rules.

"It's not only on the weapons side of the deal that competition gets distorted," Witney added. "If the arms seller agrees to buy 1,000 trucks from you in compensation, what's that done to all the rules of the single market about fair trade in trucks? The treaties make clear that, although 'national security' gives member states latitude to ignore single market rules in their arms purchases, they must not in doing so distort competition in non-military goods."


(Deutsche Welle)


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Lungo, ma interessante.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
PM poised for reshuffle


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Papandreou meets with aides to discuss changes expected next week

Prime Minister George Papandreou is expected to spend the next few days holed up on the island of Paros, where he will have meetings with his closest aides as he puts the finishing touches to a Cabinet reshuffle that is likely to be announced by the end of next week.
Papandreou has spent eight days on the Cycladic island but much of the time has been taken up by talks with Interior Minister Yiannis Ragousis and State Minister Haris Paboukis, both confidants of the premier. Culture Minister Pavlos Geroulanos, another trusted member of Papandreou’s inner circle, is due to arrive on Paros today.
The prime minister has been rumored to be considering a reshuffle for the past few weeks and, according to sources, is almost ready to announce what are expected to be fairly extensive changes rather than just minor tweaks to the lineup.
It seems certain that Health Minister Mariliza Xenogiannakopoulou and Economy Minister Louka Katseli will be two of the highest-profile casualties in the reshuffle. Xenogiannakopoulou has been criticized for not getting to grips with what is a difficult but crucial portfolio, especially as there is great waste of public funds in the health sector. Katseli has also failed to impress in her role and has been involved in several disputes with Finance Minister Giorgos Papaconstantinou.
Papandreou made headlines when he named his Cabinet last year as it included a record number of women, nine in total. However, there is a possibility that one more of these will lose her ministerial post in the upcoming reshuffle. It is rumored that Environment Minister Tina Birbili will be asked to run as PASOK’s candidate for the Attica region in the November 7 elections, which will be the first local polls since a Papandreou-inspired overhaul of local government that divides the country into 13 regions rather than 54 prefectures.
It is likely that others will be moved out of government to run in the November polls. Deputy Health Minister Fofi Gennimata, who served as Athens-Piraeus prefect for several years, and Deputy Economy Minister Stavros Arnaoutakis are rumored to be two such candidates.


(Kathimerini.gr)

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tommy271

Forumer storico
Credit default swaps rise after data


Reuters, AP


The cost of protecting Greek government debt against default rose yesterday after data showed Greece’s economy shrank by a bigger-than-expected 1.5 percent in the second quarter.
Five-year credit default swaps (CDS) on Greek government debt widened to 795 basis points (bps), up 32 bps on the day and compared with around 785 bps before the data was released, according to CDS monitor Markit.
This means it now costs 795,000 euros per year to insure an exposure of 10 million euros of Greek government bonds.
“Greece is widening after disappointing Q2 GDP figures,” said Markit’s Gavan Nolan.
The 10-year Greek/German government bond yield spread was steady at around 810 bps.
The latest Greek data weighed on the euro, yesterday sending it to a three-week low against the dollar as it underscored concerns about the eurozone’s recovery.
The euro slid further to $1.2859 from $1.2882 after plunging more than 3 cents on Wednesday.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Recession tunnel gets darker

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Second-quarter GDP data shows economy in worse shape; May jobless figures soar

By Stelios Bouras - Kathimerini English Edition / [email protected]

Belt-tightening measures aimed at restoring Greece's fiscal health sent the economy into a deeper-than-expected recession in the second quarter of the year, forcing a growing number of workers into unemployment.
Provisional data released by the Hellenic Statistical Authority (ELSTAT) yesterday showed gross domestic product (GDP) contracted by 3.5 percent on an annual basis, versus a drop of 2.3 percent in the first quarter of the year. Quarter-on-quarter it contracted by 1.5 percent.

Polls conducted by Reuters and Bloomberg showed that economists were looking for a annual contraction rate of 3.3-3.4 percent.
Alpha Bank blamed a large part of the drop off on a 39.8 percent cut in the government's investment program in the first half of the year, adding that a recovery in spending on public investments after June will help support growth.
«It is likely that the Greek economy's recession is peaking,» it said in a report yesterday.
The European Commission, International Monetary Fund and European Central Bank, which agreed to lend Athens 110 billion euros, expect the economy to contract by 4 percent this year but Finance Minister Giorgos Papaconstantinou is more upbeat, recently predicting a less severe contraction rate.

Greece has promised to reduce its budget deficit by 13.7 billion euros in 2010 to 18.6 billion euros, or 8.1 percent of GDP, in exchange for the rescue funds but the state's austerity measures are taking a heft toll on the economy.
The deficit cut, which translates into a massive 12-month fiscal adjustment, is a result of value-added tax hikes and cuts to pensions and public servants' salaries, which are eroding household disposable income.
Giorgos Kasimatis, the president of the Central Union of Chambers of Greece (KEEE), said earlier this week more than 100,000 businesses across Greece are heading for closure due to plunging consumption, putting 150,000 jobs at risk.
ELSTAT data on May unemployment yesterday highlighted the deteriorating labor market conditions, particularly among younger Greeks.

Unemployment in May jumped to 12 percent from 8.5 percent in the same month a year earlier, which means that 181,784 people lost their jobs. Greece's working population stands at 4.43 million people.
One in three people aged between 15 to 24 were out of work in May while the jobless rate for those aged between 25-34 stands at 15.8 percent. The jobless figure in the 27-member European Union stood at 10 percent.
Unemployment is expected to rise sharply by the end of the year, according to the Greek General Confederation of Labor (GSEE), which sees the figure rising to as high as 20 percent due to the downturn and recently introduced changes to labor laws, allowing employers more flexibility in cutting staff numbers.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
Downturn may push NPLs to 12 pct


By Evgenia Tzortzi - Kathimerini


Banks fear that nonperforming loans (NPLs) will rise to above 10 percent, reaching possibly 12 percent, in the last quarter of the year and for all of 2011, as household disposable income continues to drop and unemployment numbers rise.
The increase of loans in arrears, expected to reach 22 to 26 billion euros, out of the total of 222 billion euros owed, is the biggest headache for banks right now.
Data from the Bank of Greece shows that total outstanding loans held by households in 2009 rose 2.1 percent despite eroding household income levels.
This means that total outstanding credit, as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP), rose to 72.8 percent, from 70.9 percent.
The figure is lower than the eurozone average, which stands at 95.4 percent, but still needs to be carefully monitored.
A reason why this figure may pose a threat to banks is the sector’s lack of experience in handling NPLs in similiar crises and its inability to make reliable forecasts for bad loans.
The European Central Bank recently forced six Greek lenders, those that took part in the European stress tests, to adopt NPL forecasts for provisions of around 13 billion euros for the 2010-2011 period.
The Bank of Greece, which plans to conduct its own stress tests on Greek lenders in September, is concerned about the rise of new loans in arrears to 3.9 percent at the end of 2009, up from 2.4 percent in 2008.
The index measures the likelihood of a loan not being repaid, however it is not affected by the rate of credit expansion and loans being written off.
At the end of March this year, the percentage of NPLs reached 8.2 percent of total credit, boosting the amount of bad loans to 20 billion euros.

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Con questo articolo chiudiamo la rassegna stampa mattutina ...
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tommy271

Forumer storico
13/08/2010 9.31

Effetto Germania sull'euro, si attende Pil zona euro


(Teleborsa) - Roma, 13 ago - Timida risalita della moneta di eurolandia stamane nei confronti del biglietto verde a 1,288 dollari, sulle notizie positive provenienti dalla Germania. Il Pil tedesco nel 2° trimestre dell'anno ha registrato un balzo record, che non si vedeva dalla riunificazione delle due Germanie, grazie soprattutto alle esportazioni favorite dalla debolezza dell'euro.

Tale statistica smorza, ma solo in piccola parte, il rallentamento della divisa di eurolandia registrato negli ultimi giorni, sull'avversione al rischio da parte degli investitori per le preoccupazioni sul ritmo della ripresa economica mondiale.
Secondo alcuni esperti alcuni fondi hedge sarebbero pronti a tornare a scommettere contro la divisa del Vecchio Continente, visto anche che molte banche irlandesi continuano a traballare e che l'economia della Grecia resta in forte difficoltà.

Tra i dati macro che potrebbero influenzare ancora il mercato valutario ci sono in Usa i prezzi al consumo, le vendite al dettaglio la fiducia del Michigan e le scorte all'industria mentre nella zona euro si guarderà alla bilancia commerciale e al Pil del 2° trimestre.
 

bia06

Listen other's viewpoint avoid conflicts & wars.
Grazie Tommy

Grazie per la pazienza ed il tempo che dedichi. Io scrivo poco qui ma osservo molto. Perciò ritengo doveroso ringraziarti. :up:

Downturn may push NPLs to 12 pct


By Evgenia Tzortzi - Kathimerini


Banks fear that nonperforming loans (NPLs) will rise to above 10 percent, reaching possibly 12 percent, in the last quarter of the year and for all of 2011, as household disposable income continues to drop and unemployment numbers rise.
The increase of loans in arrears, expected to reach 22 to 26 billion euros, out of the total of 222 billion euros owed, is the biggest headache for banks right now.
Data from the Bank of Greece shows that total outstanding loans held by households in 2009 rose 2.1 percent despite eroding household income levels.
This means that total outstanding credit, as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP), rose to 72.8 percent, from 70.9 percent.
The figure is lower than the eurozone average, which stands at 95.4 percent, but still needs to be carefully monitored.
A reason why this figure may pose a threat to banks is the sector’s lack of experience in handling NPLs in similiar crises and its inability to make reliable forecasts for bad loans.
The European Central Bank recently forced six Greek lenders, those that took part in the European stress tests, to adopt NPL forecasts for provisions of around 13 billion euros for the 2010-2011 period.
The Bank of Greece, which plans to conduct its own stress tests on Greek lenders in September, is concerned about the rise of new loans in arrears to 3.9 percent at the end of 2009, up from 2.4 percent in 2008.
The index measures the likelihood of a loan not being repaid, however it is not affected by the rate of credit expansion and loans being written off.
At the end of March this year, the percentage of NPLs reached 8.2 percent of total credit, boosting the amount of bad loans to 20 billion euros.

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Con questo articolo chiudiamo la rassegna stampa mattutina ...
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Scrambler

Forumer attivo
Grazie per tutti gli aggiornamenti anche da me, scrivo poco ma leggo spesso e dato il mio incastro con la Grecia:-x le Tue notizie mi aiutano a valutare meglio la situazione.
 

tommy271

Forumer storico
GRECIA: BRATISLAVA, NO AIUTI AD ATENE. NOI NON ABBIAMO RICEVUTO UN CENT

(ASCA) - Roma, 13 ago - La Slovacchia difende la decisioene di rifiutare alla Grecia il prestito di 816 milioni di euro, che era la quota di competenza di Bratislava nell'ambito del pacchetto di aiuti deciso dai paesi dell'Eurozona.

''Si', noi siamo i soli ad aver detto no, ma sono sicura che il nostro no era anche nella testa di altri leader dei paesi dell'Unione Europea'', ha spiegato al Financial Time Deutschland la premier slovacca Iteva Radicova.

''Quando noi abbiamo fatto le riforme fondamentali nel periodo 1998-2002'' che hanno preparato alla Slovacchia la strada per entrare nella Ue (2004) e nell'euro (2009), spiega la premier, ''nessuno ci ha aiutato. Non abbiamo ricevuto un centesimo. Proprio niente. Sono stati i nostri cittadini a sopportare un peso che non era facile da portare'', ha concluso la Radicova.
 
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